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/** @file include/ut0rnd.h
 Random numbers and hashing

 Created 1/20/1994 Heikki Tuuri
 ***********************************************************************/

#ifndef ut0rnd_h
#define ut0rnd_h

#include <atomic>
#include <cstdint>

#include "univ.i"
#include "ut0byte.h"
#include "ut0math.h"

#include "ut0class_life_cycle.h"
#include "ut0crc32.h"
#include "ut0seq_lock.h"

namespace ut {
/** The following function generates pseudo-random 64bit integers which
enumerate the value space generated by a linear congruence. This is very similar
to what can be achieved with std::linear_congruential_engine<uint64_t, ...>. If
you need reliably good pseudo-random numbers for some reason, please consider
using std::mersenne_twister_engine<>.
@return a pseudo-random number */
[[nodiscard]] static inline uint64_t random_64();

/** The following function returns fine clock count as random value.
This is used for cases which need performance more than the true randomness.
It is not causing any loads or stores, so it is very CPU-cache-friendly.
Even for very frequent use, it doesn't cause any CPU cache pollution.
@return a pseudo-random number */
[[nodiscard]] static inline uint64_t random_64_fast();

/** Generates a pseudo-random integer from a given interval.
@param[in]      low     low limit; can generate also this value
@param[in]      high    high limit; can generate also this value
@return the pseudo-random number within the [low, high] two-side inclusive range
*/
[[nodiscard]] static inline uint64_t random_from_interval(uint64_t low,
                                                          uint64_t high);

/** Generates a light-weight pseudo-random integer from a given interval.
This is used for the cases which need performance more than the true randomness.
@param[in]      low     low limit; can generate also this value
@param[in]      high    high limit; can generate also this value
@return the pseudo-random number within the [low, high] two-side inclusive range
*/
[[nodiscard]] static inline uint64_t random_from_interval_fast(uint64_t low,
                                                               uint64_t high);

/** Hashes a 64-bit integer.
@param[in]	value	64-bit integer
@return hashed value */
[[nodiscard]] static inline uint64_t hash_uint64(uint64_t value);

/** Hashes a character string ending in the null character.
 @return hashed value */
[[nodiscard]] static inline uint64_t hash_string(const char *str);

/** Hashes a pair of 64bit integers.
@param[in]	n1	first 64bit integer
@param[in]	n2	second 64bit integer
@return hashed value */
[[nodiscard]] static inline uint64_t hash_uint64_pair(uint64_t n1, uint64_t n2);
/** Hashes a binary buffer of given length.
@param[in]  buf   buffer of bytes
@param[in]  len   length
@param[in]  seed  seed to be used in calculation. Can be previous value. A
                  default value is just a randomly chosen number.
@return hashed value */
[[nodiscard]] static inline uint64_t hash_binary(
    const byte *buf, size_t len, uint64_t seed = 0xacb1f3526e25dd39);

/** Hashes a binary buffer of given length in the old innobase way. This is
highly inefficient, don't use outside areas that require backward compatibility
on data written to disk.
@param[in]	str		buffer of bytes
@param[in]	len		length
@return hashed value */
[[nodiscard]] static inline uint32_t hash_binary_ib(const byte *str,
                                                    size_t len);

namespace detail {
/** Seed value of ut::random_64() */
extern thread_local uint64_t random_seed;

/** A helper method, it is used by hash_binary_ib for backward compatibility.
NOTE: Do not use this method, it produces results that are not hashed well.
Especially for sequences of pairs of \<i+n, j+n\> over n. */
constexpr uint32_t hash_uint32_pair_ib(uint32_t n1, uint32_t n2) {
  constexpr uint32_t HASH_RANDOM_MASK = 1463735687;
  constexpr uint32_t HASH_RANDOM_MASK2 = 1653893711;

  return ((((n1 ^ n2 ^ HASH_RANDOM_MASK2) << 8) + n1) ^ HASH_RANDOM_MASK) + n2;
}

/* Helper methods to read unaligned little-endian integers. These should be
optimized to just simple, single reads on little-endian architecture like x86
and x64. It may be different for SPARC (and in particular read_from_8(&some_u64)
is not equal to some_u64's value. On SPARC the unaligned reads are prohibited,
so for buffer that is not known to be aligned we will read data byte by byte.
Note that the following methods and usages similar to what we do in
hash_binary() could be applied to crc32 algorithm calculations and an early
investigation showed 10-50% improvement in CRC32 speed for buffer lengths <=
500. However, there was a lot of effort put into crc32 implementation to make
sure it is efficient and generates correct, simple assembly for x64, ARM (and M1
CPU) and other architectures. So in order to incorporate these ideas into CRC32
a lot of testing is required to be performed again, with care. */

static inline int64_t read_from_1(const byte *addr) { return *addr; }
static inline int64_t read_from_2(const byte *addr) {
  return read_from_1(addr) | (read_from_1(addr + 1) << 8);
}
static inline int64_t read_from_4(const byte *addr) {
  return read_from_2(addr) | (read_from_2(addr + 2) << 16);
}
static inline int64_t read_from_8(const byte *addr) {
  return read_from_4(addr) | (read_from_4(addr + 4) << 32);
}

/** Table for Tabulation Hashing, precomputed hash values for all byte values.
The table could be for different amount of bits per chunk than 8, but 8 seems to
yield faster hash calculation than 4 or 16bits - 4bits require 16 XOR operations
and sets of bit manipulations, while 16bit require bigger tables that slow down
caches. The indexes are set such that hash values for a specific byte value are
stored in the same cache line (8 values * 8 bytes = 64B). This way it should be
much faster and less demanding on CPU caches to calculate results for small
integers (where most bytes are 0). */
extern std::array<std::array<uint64_t, 8>, 256> tab_hash_lookup_table;

}  // namespace detail

static inline uint64_t random_64() {
  detail::random_seed = hash_uint64(detail::random_seed);
  return detail::random_seed;
}

static inline uint64_t random_64_fast() {
  /* Granularity of my_timer_cycles() might be over 1, to keep constant rate for
  frequency changes of CPU core clocks. Drops lower 5 bits. */
  const uint64_t res = my_timer_cycles();
  return res != 0 ? res >> 5 : random_64();
}

template <uint64_t random_64_func()>
static inline uint64_t random_from_interval_gen(uint64_t low, uint64_t high) {
  ut_ad(high >= low);
  return low + (random_64_func() % (high - low + 1));
}

static inline uint64_t random_from_interval(uint64_t low, uint64_t high) {
  return random_from_interval_gen<random_64>(low, high);
}

static inline uint64_t random_from_interval_fast(uint64_t low, uint64_t high) {
  /* FIXME: To keep backward compatibility with the previous ut_rnd_interval(),
  high value is not to be returned to keep same behavior for performance tuning
  parameter.
  (Bug#37212019: behavior related to innodb_spin_wait_delay changed in 8.0.30)
  This function is not required accurate randomness, no real problems. */

  if (low == high) {
    return (low);
  }

  return random_from_interval_gen<random_64_fast>(low, high - 1);
}

static inline uint64_t hash_uint64(uint64_t value) {
#ifndef CRC32_DEFAULT
  if (ut_crc32_cpu_enabled) {
    return crc32_hash_uint64(value);
  }
#endif /* !CRC32_DEFAULT */

  /* This implements Tabulation Hashing. It is a simple yet effective algorithm
  that easily passes the unit tests that check distributions of hash values
  modulo different numbers. Other techniques like one from hash_uint64_pair_fast
  or extended 4-universal version did have some problems for specific modulo
  numbers or have been providing 61bit hashes. */
  uint64_t res = 0;
  for (size_t i = 0; i < sizeof(uint64_t); ++i) {
    res ^= detail::tab_hash_lookup_table[(value >> (i * 8)) & 0xFF][i];
  }
  return res;
}

static inline uint64_t hash_uint64_pair(uint64_t n1, uint64_t n2) {
  return hash_uint64(hash_uint64(n1) ^ n2);
}

static inline uint64_t hash_string(const char *str) {
  return hash_binary(reinterpret_cast<const byte *>(str), strlen(str));
}

static inline uint64_t hash_binary(const byte *str, size_t len, uint64_t seed) {
  /* Our implementation is slower than CRC32 while the CRC32 implementation is
  super fast, especially for higher lengths as it leverages 3-fold parallelism
  on CPU core pipeline level. */
  if (len >= 15) {
    /* The CRC32 is returning only 32bits of hash. We take out the first 8 bytes
    to seed our 64bit hash just like we do when CRC32 is not used. */
    const auto h = hash_uint64_pair(seed, detail::read_from_8(str));
    return hash_uint64_pair(h, ut_crc32(str + 8, len - 8));
  }

  /* The following algorithm is based on idea of applying hash_uint64_pair for
  64bit blocks of data. If there are less than 8 bytes remaining, we hash
  remaining 4, 2 and 1 bytes for all input bytes have influence on result hash.
  */

  uint64_t h = seed;
  size_t i = 0;
  if (len & 8) {
    h = hash_uint64_pair(h, detail::read_from_8(str + i));
    i += 8;
  }
  uint64_t last_part = 0;
  if ((len & 7) == 0) {
    return h;
  }
  if (len & 4) {
    last_part |= detail::read_from_4(str + i) << (16 + 8);
    i += 4;
  }
  if (len & 2) {
    last_part |= detail::read_from_2(str + i) << 8;
    i += 2;
  }
  if (len & 1) {
    last_part |= detail::read_from_1(str + i);
    i += 1;
  }
  ut_ad(i == len);
  return hash_uint64_pair(h, last_part);
}

static inline uint32_t hash_binary_ib(const byte *str, size_t len) {
  uint32_t hash_value = 0;
  const byte *str_end = str + (len & 0xFFFFFFF8);

  ut_ad(str || !len);

  while (str < str_end) {
    hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
    hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
    hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
    hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
    hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
    hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
    hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
    hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
  }

  switch (len & 0x7) {
    case 7:
      hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
      [[fallthrough]];
    case 6:
      hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
      [[fallthrough]];
    case 5:
      hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
      [[fallthrough]];
    case 4:
      hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
      [[fallthrough]];
    case 3:
      hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
      [[fallthrough]];
    case 2:
      hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
      [[fallthrough]];
    case 1:
      hash_value = detail::hash_uint32_pair_ib(hash_value, *str++);
  }

  return (hash_value);
}
}  // namespace ut

#endif
